"NCIS: New Orleans" leads the drama pack, which was expected due to a two-part episode arc of CBS' No. 1 crime procedural, "NCIS," being set in New Orleans earlier this spring with Scott Bakula in the lead role.

The network is also picking up "Madam Secretary," with Tea Leoni returning to TV as a diplomat that many consider modeled on Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Leading the comedy roster is "The Odd Couple," former "Friends" star Matthew Perry's reboot of the Neil Simon classic, which started as a Broadway hit and later was a 1970s TV staple with Tony Randall and Jack Klugman as unlikely roommates.

CBS also grabbed "The McCarthys," a family drama starring Tyler Ritter (son of TV's late John Ritter) as a gay man much put upon by his extended Irish family.

It remains unclear which of these shows will be earmarked for fall or midseason, but CBS, like its rival broadcasters, is preparing to announce its full schedule next week in New York.

A story about people who love one another made by people who clearly love one another, "Parks and Recreation" ended its seven-season, zigzag run through prime time Tuesday night on NBC. In the final shot, star Amy Poehler, as public servant Leslie Knope, faced the camera, all aglow, and...

The finale of "Parks and Recreation" aired on NBC on Tuesday night, and in a bold move, the show went further into the future than it already had in its final season, revealing what the public servants of Pawnee, Ind., would be doing decades from now.

Grammy Award-winner Patti LaBelle and Michael Sam, the NFL's first openly gay draft pick, are two of the 11 celebrities announced Tuesday as part of the upcoming 20th season of ABC's "Dancing With the Stars."